| Literature DB >> 28405532 |
Muhammad Nadeem1, Salman Mansoor2, Salman Assad3, Fariha Ilyas4, Ahmed H Qavi5, Shoab Saadat6.
Abstract
Patients with spinal abnormalities infrequently present with intradural intramedullary bleeding. The more common causes include spinal trauma, arteriovenous malformations and saccular aneurysms of spinal arteries. On occasion, spinal cord tumors either primary or metastatic may cause intramedullary bleed with ependymoma of the conus medullaris. Spinal nerve sheath tumors such as schwannomas only rarely cause intradural intramedullary bleed, especially in the absence of spinal cord or nerve root symptoms. We report a case of spinal intradural schwannoma presenting with acute onset of quadriparesis. Cerebral angiography studies were negative but magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the spine revealed a large hemorrhagic tumor in the thoracolumbar junction. However, we suggest that the patients with intradural intramedullary bleed should be evaluated for underlying spine disease.Entities:
Keywords: intradural; sah; schwannoma; spine
Year: 2017 PMID: 28405532 PMCID: PMC5383370 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.1082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1MRI of thoracolumbar spinal tumor
Sagittal T2- [A] and T1-weighted [B] imaging shows a heterogeneous signal intensity of large mass at the conus medullaris (red arrows). The two hyperintense subdural hematomas located caudal to the mass (blue arrows). There is heterogeneous enhancement of the mass post-intravenus contrast [C]
Figure 2MRI spine
Axial T2- [A] and T1-weighted [B] images show hyperintense subdural blood collections located both anterior and posterior (red arrows) to the cauda equina. The subdural blood is separate from the epidural fat signal intensity anteriorly [A, white arrow]. Coronal fast imaging with steady-state acquisition [C] shows the posterior blood collection (blue arrow) that is distinctly isolated from the hyperintense cerebrospinal fluid (red arrow)
Figure 3Operative and histopathology findings
[A] The intraoperative picture shows the schwannoma with intratumoral hemorrhage (arrow). [B] Histopathological study of the mass shows macro hemorrhage within the mass [C, D] cellular area and loose myxoid area